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Abstract:

In certain parts of the great province of Connaught, principally in
the Counties of Mayo and Galway, and in a few spots of Donegal,
in the north, are comparatively closely-populated districts where the
inhabitants living upon small patches of land, are unable from the
peculiar circumstances of their situation to earn a livelihood, either
by the mere cultivation of their own holdings, by labour upon other
farms, or in any other pursuit. To find employment they are therefore
forced by these conditions of their existence into precarious and
peculiar ways of living. The miserable worn-out pieces of ground
they are permitted to live upon and cultivate, are, relatively to the
prevailing price for good land, disproportionately over-rented. From
the unscientific mode of culture adopted, the fatal habit of sowing,
year after year, the same kind of crop?the inevitable but not immortal
potato?the land is unsuited as well as inadequate. The
ground is actually sick of this uniform, changeless, and unvarying
persistence in the growing of this one kind of root, and as a consesequence,
the first visitation of any climatic inclemency, such as a
wetter summer than usual, as was the case this year, brings with it
the certain failure of the crop, which means for the growers the
total loss of their main food resource?translated into hard facts
means scarcity in its acutest form. To add to the deleterious results
of this simple if not stupid style of cultivation, the tendency of late
which has arisen to use artificial manures, and the invariable custom,
which comes from ignorance, to select, not the best, but often the
smallest and worse sorts for seed; we find many other active causes,
all tending to produce the same disastrous effects.